 When will you people get it? Yeah, this feels like a dream. YouTube team keeping clean. What's going on? It's Aang Raven here with another video. Before we get into this video, special shout out to all the team keeping clean patients. Special shout out to the newest patients, Swink and DeAndre. I appreciate y'all rocking with the channel and showing that extra support. Thank you for that. Now, Lamar Jackson, we know that this has been the summer of Lamar Jackson. And this has been the summer of Lamar Jackson, letting people know I am tired of all your stuff. We, of course, remember the whole back and forth with Bernard Pollock. We remember when he called out Chris Sims. And we remember when he even called out these anonymous NFL defensive coordinators who continue to remain nameless. And Lamar Jackson has shown, like, look, man, I've been nice, especially these first four years have been pretty nice. When it comes to calling out, people has been a little stuff here and there. But this off season, Lamar has been extra vocal. And I love it. I love it. Reason being because a lot of times people, they can take your kindness for weakness. And he is showing you like, hey, that's not what it is. Me being kind does not mean that I'm weak. And in this interview that he did, this snippet that came out that he did an interview with a young man from CBS Sports, it ended up being the same thing. And I felt like this was a learning experience for both sides, especially for the reporter though, because if you're going to come with an outlandish statement like that and Lamar calls you out on it, you know what? Let's just watch the clip. You're getting a little bigger, getting a little thicker, a little muscular. I hear that you don't like working out though. Tell me about that. Who said that? Sources. What sources? I don't know about that. I had to do something to get this off, you know? So that clip, ooh, it got so cringy at the end when he started laughing. Like, oh man, Lamar done called me out. Let me try to laugh it off. But this laugh, it just really wasn't doing it. And it just, it made it that much more awkward. But like I said, I do really believe that it was a learning experience for both sides. Now first with Lamar, the reason I say it was a learning experience for him, and this could be something that he already knows, but it is another way that he can learn how to deal with media. And this is one of the biggest reasons why players, they don't like dealing with media a lot because media will say this and they will say that. And usually the players, they answer and they gotta sort of go around with questions and whatnot. They gotta divert sometimes, but a lot of times with media, this is a good way to spin it back on them. Because the media, they will say this, that and the third to you. But then if you flip it back to them, they can be flabbergasted. Like the young guy was from CBS Sports. He ain't know what to say. He ain't know what to do. And he tried to put Lamar on the spot. Hey, you're an NFL player. You're a franchise quarterback. Your team is in negotiations with you. You getting ready to make a whole lot of money. You already scrutinized so much as is. There's so many narratives that continue to get pushed about you every single day. You're on ESPN, FS1, the NFL Network and narratives continue to get pushed about you literally every single day. You know what? Let me add one more. Hey, I heard you don't like working out. You see what that does? Something so small, it can add to what's already been going on for the longest. I heard you don't like working out. So I heard something negative about you, especially with the timing of all of this too. The timing of when this interview is happening amongst everything that's getting ready to go down and everything that already has gone down. I heard you don't like working out. You see what that does? It's just, it's not a good look for him. But with Lamar putting it back on him. Oh, where'd you hear that from? Who say that? Where'd that come from? It puts it back on that report and it puts that pressure on him. And you see the pressure, it busts his pipe. So he just says, oh, sources. That's it, sources. Put a name on it. Put a name on it. If you're gonna put a question on it, put a name on it to back it up. But with the reporter, I just hope that this will definitely be, again, a learning experience for him too, of what not to do. And we know this was just a clip. This was just a portion of the interview. But in my opinion, this, it should never even have been part of an interview. It shouldn't even have even been part of the interview. That question. Because it just, again, it's such a bad look. Lamar Jackson, as we know, again, we've been saying this for the longest, the narratives will continue to fly. They will continue to fly. They're not going anywhere. They're never gonna go anywhere. For his entire career, he is always going to deal with negatives. And for somebody with Lamar Jackson, he's probably, he's gonna have to do twice, even three times as much in order to be recognized with somebody else who's only doing one time as much. Because people just, they don't put him on this same pedestal as other quarterbacks. They don't apply the same standards to him as they do to other quarterbacks. So this is something that, unfortunately, he's just gonna have to deal with, like I said, for his whole career. He's already been dealing with it for the longest. So him and his camp and whatnot, they know how to approach it. But it's still very unfortunate when you've done so much and you've accomplished so much and you still have to go out there and almost prove yourself, like I said, two or three times as much as the next person. Like then, cause again, think about that. Like you see Lamar, even if you compare him from just last year alone, obviously you compare him from his rookie season and then you look at him now, it's like he went from like this to like that. And it's like, whoa, hold up now. And to say something like that, oh, I don't like to work out. Really? Come on now. So anyway, it is what it is. It is what it is. I guess this can also be like some teaching tape for any young reporters or any inexperienced reporters that are trying to come up and interview players in the future. This can be a clip on what not to do and how not to do it. And a lot of times it's, and this is just in life in general, it's not even what you say, but it's how you say it. If he had an inkling that Lamar Jackson didn't like working out, if he felt that or if he questioned that, then he could have said something like, oh, how's your workouts been going? What have you had to do in order to really put on all this muscle mass and how do you feel about what your training regimen has been? Could have said something like that. Then Lamar could have taken you through the process if I would have gave a little shout out to Spence Fit and then walked you through what he's done to get to this level. And then you could have, hey, how'd you like it? How you liking the results? How you feeling? How was the process? Something like that, but hey, I heard you don't like working out. It's just that wasn't good at all. But again, hopefully he learns from it and then in his next interview with whatever player he interviews next, it goes a lot better. But anyway, Team Keep It Clean, I appreciate y'all, I love y'all. I will see you later on today in questions from subscribers and we out. Yeah, this feels like a dream. Oh, just what I made. What I made. You too, Team Keep It Clean. You see my boy, he like automated. Automated. Boy, that's my homie. Ain't that right engraving? Right engraving. Shout out to engraving.